1. Academic Validation
  2. A missense mutation in the alphaB-crystallin chaperone gene causes a desmin-related myopathy

A missense mutation in the alphaB-crystallin chaperone gene causes a desmin-related myopathy

  • Nat Genet. 1998 Sep;20(1):92-5. doi: 10.1038/1765.
P Vicart 1 A Caron P Guicheney Z Li M C Prévost A Faure D Chateau F Chapon F Tomé J M Dupret D Paulin M Fardeau
Affiliations

Affiliation

PMID: 9731540 DOI: 10.1038/1765
Abstract

Desmin-related myopathies (DRM) are inherited neuromuscular disorders characterized by adult onset and delayed accumulation of aggregates of desmin, a protein belonging to the type III intermediate filament family, in the sarcoplasma of skeletal and cardiac muscles. In this paper, we have mapped the locus for DRM in a large French pedigree to a 26-cM interval in chromosome 11q21-23. This region contains the alphaB-crystallin gene (CRYAB), a candidate gene encoding a 20-kD protein that is abundant in lens and is also present in a number of non-ocular tissues, including cardiac and skeletal muscle. AlphaB-crystallin is a member of the small heat shock protein (shsp) family and possesses molecular chaperone activity. We identified an R120G missense mutation in CRYAB that co-segregates with the disease phenotype in this family. Muscle cell lines transfected with the mutant CRYAB cDNA showed intracellular aggregates that contain both desmin and alphaB-crystallin as observed in muscle fibers from DRM patients. These results are the first to identify a defect in a molecular chaperone as a cause for an inherited human muscle disorder.

Figures